
SOME ASPECTS OF MORTALITY IN THREE SHROPSHIRE PARISHES IN THE MID-SEVENTEENTH CENTURY Sylvia Watts Sylvia Watts’ interest in the demography of Shropshire extends over a period of twenty years. Having taught in primary schools for many years, she submitted her doctoral thesis to Wolverhampton University in 1995, and has since lectured part-time at Birmingham University, for Shropshire County Council and for the WEA. Introduction After relatively rapid population growth in the later sixteenth century and slower growth in the first four decades of the seventeenth century, the mid- seventeenth century nationally saw growth change to stagnation and even loss. Falling fertility, changes in nuptiality or worsening mortality, or a combination of all these, could have caused this phenomenon. The aim of this article is to examine whether three Shropshire parishes – Wellington, Wem and Whitchurch – followed this national trend, to investigate aspects of mortality in the three parishes during this highly significant period and to place this mortality in its economic and social context. Wellington, Wem and Whitchurch are all in north Shropshire and all in the ancient Bradford Hundred. They are similar in many ways: all are very large parishes of between 11,000 and 15,000 acres, all have a small market town located roughly centrally, and all are surrounded by an agricultural hinterland of hamlets and isolated farmsteads. All the market towns were originally Saxon villages situated on the best soils in the parish, while the hamlets were for the most part settled in the later Saxon period or early Middle Ages, and the isolated farms were established on cleared woodland in the later Middle Ages. Their manorial lords stimulated the growth of all three towns in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries by giving them market charters and laying out burgage plots. All three towns, however, remained unincorporated and under the control of the lord of the manor’s court. All three towns fall into the lowest and most numerous category of Clark and Slack’s typology of English early modern towns, the simple market town. 1 However, by the 17th century, despite these similarities and the basically agrarian character of their economies, differences between the three towns and their hamlets were emerging. Whitchurch was increasingly becoming a thoroughfare town on a major route to Chester, north Wales and Ireland, involved in long-distance provisioning of the London market with cheese and cattle. Wellington, though only a part of the parish actually lay on the east 11 Shropshire coalfield, was increasingly influenced by the development of coal and iron mining and served as the market town for the coalfield. In Wem there was much woodland clearance and drainage of marshy land and agriculture expanded and prospered, but there was no industry and it was remote from any major routes. Rough estimates based on the Hearth Tax of 1672 and the Compton Census of 1676 suggest that the population of Wellington parish was about 2,250, of Wem about 2,100 and Whitchurch about 2,750.2 With these large multi-township parishes it can be difficult to disentangle the town population from that of the whole parish, but the evidence of various sources such as surveys, Easter Books and parish registers which record an individual’s residence within the parish indicates that by the mid-seventeenth century about half the population of Whitchurch and Wellington parishes lived in the towns and about one-third of that of Wem. Reliability of the parish registers The halting of the population growth in the mid-seventeenth century is a demographic trend of great significance; as parish registers are the main source for examining this phenomenon, they must be approached particularly critically. It is generally assumed that baptisms, burials and marriages may all have been under-recorded. Rickman (as cited by Jones) gave the following general causes for under-registration of burials: the presence of Roman Catholics and dissenters who would not have been baptised according to the rites of the Church of England and would therefore not be eligible for the Church of England burial ceremony, people too poor to afford a burial ceremony, and negligence, particularly in small benefices where there were no resident clergy.3 Though there were groups of Baptists at Bridgnorth and Shrewsbury in the 1650s who may have objected to Church of England baptismal rites, Skinner found no evidence of Baptists in Wellington, Wem or Whitchurch during this period.4 The 1660s saw a growth of Presbyterianism in Whitchurch and the surrounding area stimulated in particular by the well- known preacher, Philip Henry. In his diary Henry mentioned a controversy in Whitchurch when local dissenters protested against Church of England baptism because they objected to the use of the sign of the cross and involvement of godparents, but Henry himself conformed to Anglican baptism. Roman Catholics were only strong in a few areas of Shropshire and the 1676 Compton Census shows very few in Wellington, Wem and Whitchurch.5 Whether the dead were unbaptised nonconformists or Roman Catholics or simply too poor for a burial ceremony, in most parishes there was no practicable alternative to interment in the parish churchyard. The question is, therefore, whether the register lists interments or ceremonies. Burial registers were intended to record burial ceremonies, and it is rarely explicitly stated whether entries record the ceremony or the interment. The Whitchurch, Wem and Wellington registers all included stillborn babies and all referred to ‘son of’ or ‘daughter of’ without a Christian name (which Jones suggests may imply an unbaptised child); it is probable, therefore, that in Wellington, Wem and Whitchurch recorded burials imply all interments.6 The causes of under- registration of baptisms proposed by Rickman were similar to the under- registration of burials with the addition of private baptism.7 The incidence of 12 private baptism and the extent to which this led to omissions in the register is essentially unquantifiable, but Jones suggests that it was only beginning to become fashionable in the mid-seventeenth century.8 Contemporaries believed that the problem of small parishes without resident clergy was the most likely cause of deficient registers: Wellington, Wem and Whitchurch, however, were all large parishes and all had resident clergy. The changing religious requirements of the government during the Civil War years must have added an extra dimension to the perennial reasons for possible deficiencies in the registers. In 1643 a Presbyterian ministry was established and the Book of Common Prayer forbidden, the Directory for Public Worship prescribing in August 1645 the only legal rites.9 In June 1646 the government ordered that presbyteries or classes, voluntary associations of clergy and laity, should be established as an alternative form of organisation to the parish.10 Though this form of organisation, in many areas of the country, had hardly been implemented before it was abolished in 1654, it was quickly put into effect in north Shropshire. Disruption in the personnel of parish clergy was caused in 1643 by the requirement to sign the Covenant and again in 1654 when a committee of 38 members was appointed by Cromwell to enquire into the learning and fitness for office of parish clergy. This committee was mainly composed of Independents and was supported in the counties by assistants: there were 20 such assistants in Shropshire including the incumbents of Wellington, Wem and Whitchurch.11 The impact of these changes in the church during the Civil War and the Interregnum inevitably created problems the significance of which varied from place to place and even from year to year and may have had repercussions on the keeping of the parish registers. The main factor in determining the effect of these changes in particular parishes must have been the attitudes of their clergy and their degree of sympathy with the prevailing regime. In Wellington Francis Wright was vicar from 1621 until his death in 1659. He was reputed to be the first Puritan in Shropshire, and as a Puritan he remained in office on the outbreak of the Civil War, becoming an influential member of the first classis of north Shropshire.12 Francis Wright was the registrar for Wellington and after he died in June 1659 the handwriting in the registers deteriorates markedly, but the registers were nevertheless still regularly maintained. The only obvious gaps in the registers are of marriages in the later 1640s and early 1650s.13 Nicholas Page who became rector of Wem in 1639 was a Royalist who signed the loyal address from the clergy to the King in 1642, and was ejected when Wem became a Parliamentary garrison in the autumn of 1643.14 His successor, Andrew Parsons, was a leading member of the fourth classis of which Thomas Porter of Whitchurch was president.15 He remained in office throughout the Civil War and the Interregnum, but was removed from Wem in 1660 and in 1661 was tried, fined and imprisoned for allegedly calling the King a devil.16 Although Andrew Parsons was rector throughout the 1650s, there are gaps in the baptism register from September 1649 to November 1652 and from January 1659 (new style calendar) to July 1663 and in the burial register from 13 July 1647 until November 1653. In 1653 John Smith, the parish clerk, was elected registrar and the burial register was thereafter apparently efficiently maintained.17 In Whitchurch Thomas Fowler was ejected in 1643 for his refusal to take the Covenant.18 His place was taken by Thomas Porter, of whom it was said that ‘he was an instrument of much good... by his great prudence he so managed the ministers that on that side of the county where a Presbytery was settled that he found no need for compulsory laws.’ In 1654 Thomas Porter and Francis Wright were amongst the ministers appointed to assist the Ejectors in their enquiry into the learning and beliefs of incumbents.19 Thomas Porter is known to have supported infant baptism, arguing the case for it in a public dispute with an Anabaptist at Ellesmere in 1656.
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